This Blog is intended to serve the need of the Infocom Society of the world and particularly of Indonesia. Latest information on the development of ICT worldwide, including from Indonesia will be made available in this MASTEL 2020 Blog.
Monday, February 15, 2010
This is the culprit Hacker that hacked Google Blogger.com
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DomainName : hollything.com
RSP: China Springboard Inc.
URL: http://www.namerich.cn
Name Server: NS2.UKNETHOST.RU
Name Server: NS1.ALLDNSHOST.COM
Name Server: NS2.ALLDNSHOST.COM
Name Server: NS1.UKNETHOST.RU
Status: clientTransferProhibited
Status: clientDeleteProhibited
Creation Date: 2009-12-07
Expiration Date: 2010-12-07
Last Update Date: 2010-02-14
Registrant Name: zhang cheng
Registrant Organization: zhang cheng
Registrant Address: beijingshicaoyangqunanninglu125hao
Registrant City: beijing
Registrant Province/State: beijing
Registrant Country Code: CN
Registrant Postal Code: 102542
Registrant Phone Number: +86.01045263256
Registrant Fax: +86.01045263256
Registrant Email: qingpenghaoyou12@sina.com
Administrative Name: zhang cheng
Administrative Organization: zhang cheng
Administrative Address: beijingshicaoyangqunanninglu125hao
Administrative City: beijing
Administrative Province/State: beijing
Administrative Country Code: CN
Administrative Postal Code: 102542
Administrative Phone Number: +86.01045263256
Administrative Fax: +86.01045263256
Administrative Email: qingpenghaoyou12@sina.com
Billing Name: zhang cheng
Billing Organization: zhang cheng
Billing Address: beijingshicaoyangqunanninglu125hao
Billing City: beijing
Billing Province/State: beijing
Billing Country Code: CN
Billing Postal Code: 102542
Billing Phone Number: +86.01045263256
Billing Fax: +86.01045263256
Billing Email: qingpenghaoyou12@sina.com
Technical Name: zhang cheng
Technical Organization: zhang cheng
Technical Address: beijingshicaoyangqunanninglu125hao
Technical City: beijing
Technical Province/State: beijing
Technical Country Code: CN
Technical Postal Code: 102542
Technical Phone Number: +86.01045263256
Technical Fax: +86.01045263256
Technical Email: qingpenghaoyou12@sina.com
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Friday, February 12, 2010
MS Windows Mobile 6.5 marketshare drops, while Apple and Google marketshares increase
Microsoft saw its share of the U.S. mobile operating-system market fall slightly between September and December 2009, the period during which the company launched its Windows Mobile 6.5 update in an attempt to slow or halt its market share declines.
According to ComScore’s Feb. 8 report, Microsoft’s share of the U.S. mobile operating-system market declined exactly 1 point, from 19 percent to 18 percent, between September and December 2009. Research In Motion also experienced a 1-point drop, albeit from 42.6 to 41.6 percent, and Palm suffered a 2.2-point drop from 8.3 percent to 6.1 percent.
By contrast, Apple gained 1.2 points during that period, claiming an estimated 25.3 percent market share, while Google climbed 2.7 points to reach 5.2 percent of the market.
Microsoft attempted to position Windows Mobile 6.5 as a chance to begin anew in the smartphone OS space, where it had seen its longer-term market share decline in the face of stiff competition from the likes of Apple, RIM and other competitors. "It’s the right time to take a look at the brand, the new capability that we built in and the new business experience," Greg Sullivan, senior product manager for Windows Mobile, said in an interview with eWEEK on the eve of the operating system version’s release.
Microsoft’s overall strategy centered on releasing Mobile 6.5 on a variety of smartphones, including ones by HTC, Sony Ericsson and LG Electronics. Microsoft also pushed to create a mobile application ecosystem for Windows Marketplace, designed as a competitor to Apple’s App Store. While Microsoft executives had dangled the hope that third-party developers could build enough programs for its storefront to launch with 600 apps in place, Marketplace ended up launching in October with some 246 applications from more than 753 ISVs (independent software vendors).
When contacted by eWEEK on Feb. 4 and asked how many applications are currently in the Marketplace, a Microsoft spokesperson responded: "In November we announced over 800 applications in Windows Marketplace for Mobile, more than three times the number we offered when Marketplace launched just a month before."
In addition, the spokesperson added, "We’ve estimated that there are around 20,000 applications available for the Windows Mobile 6x platform, although it’s important to note that Windows Marketplace for Mobile is not meant to aggregate all available mobile applications."
That spokesperson declined to offer the number of applications in the Marketplace as of February, saying, “We don’t release the exact numbers for applications because it changes all the time.” Counted by hand on Feb. 9, the Windows Marketplace for Mobile Website listed 718 mobile applications, in 14 categories, for U.S.-based Mobile 6.x smartphones. A pulldown menu on that Website gives access to mobile-application pages for other countries and their native languages, including Italy and Korea; a number of those countries, however, have only a small handful of programs listed, suggesting that the worldwide total of Mobile 6.x applications is not exponentially higher than that of the United States.
By contrast, Apple’s App Store expanded to more than 100,000 apps in 2009, with research firm IDC predicting in a Dec. 3 research note that the storefront will expand to around 300,000 apps by the end of 2010. That note also predicted that Google Android’s apps could expand "by a factor of five or more" over the next 12 months.
Microsoft is planning a major smartphone-related rollout at Barcelona’s Mobile World Congress on Feb. 15; general online consensus seems to be that Microsoft will either introduce a totally new Mobile 7 or a largely revamped version of Mobile 6.5.
Minor updates to Mobile 6.5 are already circulating in the wild, with the Feb. 2 debut of the Sony Ericsson Aspen running Windows Mobile 6.5.3, a version with tweaks including capacitive touch-screen support, a horizontal scroll bar in place of tabs, touch support for legacy applications and a platform for enabling multitouch.
If Microsoft does choose to announce Mobile 7 on Feb. 15, for a rollout either later in 2010 or early 2011, then questions may arise over the company’s road map for supporting multiple operating systems running on a variety of devices. (source: eWEEK)
Wednesday, February 10, 2010
Chinese Government shut down Biggest Hacker Training Website and arrested 3 People
China officials have shut down Black Hawk Safety Net, the country's biggest hacker training Website, and arrested three people for making hacker tools available online.
China announced it has arrested three people in connection with operating a hacker training school that distributed malware and hacking tools to its members in online forums.
According to Xinhua, "China ’s state-run newspaper, three people were arrested in connection with making the tools available online through a business known as Black Hawk Safety Net. Established in 2005, Black Hawk Safety Net is reportedly headquartered in Xuchang of the central "Province and has more than 180,000 members. Police reportedly uncovered the operation as part of an investigation into a cyber-attack in "Macheng" City in 2007.
The three suspects arrested in the case are charged with offering online hacker tools, a crime newly listed in the country's criminal law last year, the paper reported.
The announcement about the arrests came as "China and the "United States grapple over cyber-security issues. "China has been at the center of accusations involving a spate of cyber-attacks last year that affected more than 30 companies, including Google, which claimed an attack on its infrastructure originated in China. Google threatened to pull out of the country in response to the situation, as well as to concerns about censorship and what it deemed were attempts to spy on the e-mail of Chinese human rights activists.
The Chinese government has sought to discredit those claims, and has publicly denied anyinvolvement in the attacks. Meanwhile, the U.S. State Department has said it will press the Chinese government for answers, and the Senate passed a resolution Feb. 3 calling on the Chinese government to conduct a thorough and transparent review of the cyber-attacks.
China says hackers caused 7.6 billion yuan ($1.02 billion) in losses in the country in 2009. (source: eWeek.com)
Tuesday, February 9, 2010
The Popularity of SMS from the 2G Era will soon end and be replaced by new services from Smartphones
With the emergence of new Smartphones such as Apple iPhone, Motorola Milestone, Nokia E-series, HTC Androit, Motorola Droid and NexusOne, Nexian Smartphones and many others, the dominance of the 2G services such as SMS will soon come to an end. Here is the latest prediction on the coming 3G or 4G services that will dominate mobile wireless services.
Weighed against any measure – impact on the industry, number of users, or revenue – SMS has been a huge success. Since its introduction more than 15 years ago, the 160-character message has revolutionized the way people communicate and use their mobile devices. With more than three billion active users, it has become the industry’s most widely used data application. SMS generates as much revenue as the combined returns from five major Internet sources - e-mail, instant messaging, social networks and chat, content, and advertising.
Who has time to read a Book? FT Press gives you a Solution
Who has time to read a whole book anymore?
The FT Press, a unit of Pearson, has introduced two series of short, digital-only titles for professionals who want quick snippets of advice for $2.99 or less.
The publisher, through a new imprint named FT Press Delivers, has quietly begun selling what it is calling Elements and Shorts through the Kindle electronic bookstore onAmazon.com and Barnes & Noble’s e-bookstore. The Elements, which the publisher has priced at $1.99, are stripped-down, 1,000- to 2,000-word versions of already-published books, while the Shorts are newly written essays of about 5,000 words, priced at $2.99.
Titles include “Reengineering the Rules of Management,” by James Champy, the co-author, with Michael Hammer, of “Reengineering the Corporation,” one of the biggest business best sellers of the 1990s, and “Keeping It Honest, From Kitchen to Coca-Cola,” by Seth Goldman, co-founder and chief of Honest Tea, the maker of organic drinks.
Amazon.com is already discounting the prices of the Shorts to $2.39 and the Elements to $1.59. So far, Barnes & Noble has kept the publisher’s pricing.
“It’s a good idea to be able to provide people with shorter, more expedient, more time-sensitive” content, said Timothy C. Moore, publisher of the FT Press.
Mr. Moore said the company had already published 242 titles and planned to have 500 by the end of the year. For the Shorts, the company is working with New Word City, a digital publisher. Mr. Moore acknowledged that sales of the new short-form titles could cannibalize traditional book sales. But, he said, “other sources of information that aren’t books are already causing upheaval” in the book market.
Mr. Champy, a consultant, said demand for longer books had fallen. “There are people who only want to access pieces of what you write,” he said. “I don’t think they have an appetite for reading a long, serious business book.”
According to Mr. Goldman, FT Press is not paying advances to authors and is offering royalties equivalent to 20 percent of the publisher’s net proceeds from each sale. Mr. Moore declined to comment, saying that such details were proprietary.
Mr. Goldman said he hoped the new mini e-books were priced cheaply enough to lure readers. “There is size and substance to it, but it’s not a full meal,” Mr. Goldman said. “It’s a healthy lunch on the go as opposed to the seven-course meal.” MOTOKO RICH (NYT)
Monday, February 8, 2010
3G BTS Power will be boosted 4x in UK to increase coverage
Ofcom is considering allowing UK's mobile operators to quadruple the power of their 3G transmissions, to improve coverage and maybe roast a few more brain cells.
The request came from Vodafone, but when Ofcom consulted the other operators they all wanted in, so now the regulator has published a consultation (pdf) with plans to increase the permitted broadcast power almost four times (from 62 to 68 on the logarithmic dBm scale).
The main problem with upping the power is interfering with the neighbours, as some signal bleeding is inevitable. For 3G this means wireless cameras used by the Program Making & Special Events (PMSE) crowd on one side, and the Complementary Ground Component needed for satellite broadcast of mobile TV services on the other.
Given that there aren't any mobile satellite TV services yet, Ofcom deals with that by agreeing that, should anyone decide to build a mobile satellite broadcasting network, they too will be allowed to broadcast at 68dBm.
The PMSE crowd are used to getting a kicking from Ofcom, and this time the regulator reckons wireless cameras already suffer so much interference from 3G that this won't make much of a difference - noting that professionals already have to avoid specific bands when near a base station, so they'll just have to do the same from a little further away once the increased power is permitted.
Ofcom points out that technology has improved since the 3G licences were flogged off, enabling higher-power transmission without greater interference leaking into neighbouring bands. Indeed, the regulator makes the point that limits on out-of-band signals aren't being changed, and increasing the power will certainly enhance in-building penetration.
The decision hasn't yet been made though, and Ofcom is inviting responses, from "stakeholders", until the 19th of March. (source: The Register, UK)